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Channel: Abandoned New York

When the shades have been pulled shut

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This multiple occupancy home contains 7,932 sq ft and was built in 1936. It contains 6 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms and an indoor swimming pool.

It's hard to wake up
When the shades have been pulled shut
This house is haunted
It's so pathetic
It makes no sense at all
I'm ripe with things to say
The words rot and fall away
What stupid poem could fix this home
I'd read it every day

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Google

NAD

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NAD 2018 10 years later. See NAD 2008 Here.
The Department of the Navy utilized 122.9 acres of the property as an naval depot between 1899 until 1965. In 1957, the Navy declared the parcel to be excess and the parcel was turned over to the General Services Administration (GSA). In 1960, GSA was given jurisdiction over the property and used the site for records and raw materials (copper and rubber) stockpile storage, while the Maritime Administration used the main wharf for occasional transshipment of heavy freight. 

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Google

The Church of the Alcohol and Drug Consumption

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Photo Above By VDFP
This Church, a structure in N. Philly dates back to 1848. 
Construction on this Church was started in May of 1848 and it was dedicated in November of the following year, with a third of the funds said to have been donated by non-Catholics who were happy to have it in the area. With majestic Gothic architecture and twin copper spires soaring fifteen stories above the ground, the Church is an iconic building and a central part of an area that has already lost much of its heritage. It was designed by Patrick Charles Keely, one of the most prolific and respected ecclesiastical church architects in America's history, and is currently the oldest surviving structure he created. St. John Neumann helped consecrate the church and St. Katharine Drexel was baptized there, so it is also of no small historical significance to the Catholic church.

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Google

CMRE Church

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The CMRE Church was founded in 1887 in West Philly, as the "Theological Seminary of the Reformed Episcopal Church", its chartered and legal name. The seminary was established based on the pledge of a trust created by Harriet Benson in March, 1886. The corner stone for the first building to house the seminary was laid on September 19 of that same year. The seminary began meeting for classes in 1886 under the tutelage of Bishop William Nicholson in his residence. It officially opened the doors to its first class of students on September 30, 1887, in its new building as the seminary of the Reformed Episcopal Church, after the trust was received on March 16, 1887.
The future of Christ Memorial has been in doubt for years, at least since the church’s 170-foot-high steeple collapsed during an intense storm in 2004.
In 2018 A demolition permit has been issued for the CMRE Church. Now it's waiting for it's fate wit the wrecking ball.


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Google

This Old Manor

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The property has been known at various times as the Heights, Woodburne, Woodbourne,

The Scott Estate, Little Flower, and Villa St Theresa.


The land on which the mansion stands was originally the a family farm which ran all the way

to the Creek and there are indications that the Great Minquas Path, a fur

trading route between the Susquahannock region and the Dutch fur trading posts, passed through the 

property.


It is said there were encampments on the "Heights of Darby" during the British occupation of 

Philadelphia (1777-1778)


Before the Civil War, the property was owned by George McHenry, President of the

Philadelphia Board of Trade, and a Southern sympathiser who went to England and arranged for 

shipments to go through the Union blockade. The land was sold at Sheriff's sale in April 1862

and the property then came under the ownership of Thomas A. Scott who served in

Abraham Lincoln's Cabinet as Assistant Secretary of War for Transportation and later as

President of the Pennsylvania Railroad..


His son, Edgar Scott, commissioned noted architect Horace Trumbauer to build the present mansion

in 1906 with the possible participation of Julian Abele.


Both Edgar Scott Senior and Edgar Scott Junior served with the Norton-Harjes American Volunteer 

Motorized Ambulance Service during the First World War.  Edgar Scott Senior died in France on 

October 20, 1918, 22 days before the Armistice. Edgar Junior married Helen Hope Montgomery

who had been the inspiration for Tracy Lord in "The Philadelphia Story."


The property was purchased by the Sisters of the Divine Redeemer in the 1930's. It is believed the 

postcard dates to the time the property was used as an orphanage. It later was a nursing home

and closed in 2005


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Google

In my Darkest Hour

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Ground was broken in 1855, the cornerstone laid in 1856, and completed in 1860 at a cost of approximately $250,000. The church is 14,000 square feet, 212 feet long, 116 feet wide, and built of blue limestone trimmed with Ohio sandstone. It incorporates 14 marble columns and 16 stained glass windows. There are three towers on the church, one large tower in front and two smaller twins in back. The main tower is 235 feet tall, is lit at night, and houses 10 bells. There are nine small bells with one large bell, they were cast at the Meneely Bell Foundry in Troy, New York at a cost estimated at $12,000 in 1906. The bells are activated through the pulling of oak levers in a chime room. The ceiling is in a hammer-beam roof style of wooden beams projecting from the roof and walls carved ornately with angels and religious symbols.

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In my hour of need,
Ha, no, you're not there
And though I reached out for you,
Wouldn't lend a hand


Through the darkest hour,
Your grace did not shine on me
Feels so cold, very cold,
No one cares for me

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I walk, I walk alone
To the promised land
There's a better place for me
But it's far, far away

Everlasting life for me
In a perfect world
But I got to die first,
Please God send me on my way


Google

The first Saints Parish

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A parish outgrows it's first church and then abandons it's second location as parishioners move. It was during the 1820s and 1830s that Irish immigrants began pouring into Albany, and that South Albany was becoming increasingly Catholic.  Its Gothic Revival style was popular during this period. As the Catholic population in South Albany continued to swell The first Saints Parish was no longer adequate. Having been abandoned since the 1970s, it has fallen into serious disrepair.
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Google

Love Always Rina

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 Wonder if it’s normal. I miss our talks.  At least before we’d talk and get all our feelings out and sort of squared away for awhile, have a cry, a shoulder to lean on, then go on with the day.  It’s be OK. Now all these feelings and things just go around in my head and never come out. No one to talk about it who could relate the same way. Ya sure as shit can’t ask someone that’s never been in your shoes and expect a good answer they just don’t know. I could ask my brother but  I don’t. He’s a guy and his feelings would be different. Enough of rattling on about my wacked out feelings. I’m sure it’s the last thing you want or need to hear.  

   Well I’ve written another very long letter here. I hope one stamp is enough. If  not I guess it’s no great loss. The letter will just come back and end up in the trash.

    Like I said earlier, I’ll talk to Tom and force an answer out of him before the end of the week. Then I’ll let you know either by mail or phone.

     Tell everyone hi from all of us. When you can, write me. Please take care and be happy. Miss you tons and again I hope I didn’t upset you. If I did I’m sorry. I just had to ask someone. 

                                  Love always. 
                                                    Rina 


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Google

Death House

house of ill repute

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STPMMC, dedicated on May 22, 1899, was a magnificent

Execution of the Richardsonian Romanesque style. STPMMC neatly

packed edifice, an asymmetrical medley of this style, featured a

façade of varied stone and brick. As the city’s oldest congregation,

St. Paul’s was built in the final months of an industrious century,

a church fitting for Hazleton. The structure overlooked the square

that housed Pardee’s mansion, which continued to command

the downtown.


At the height of the Depression, the church underwent major

Renovations, and the congregation dropped “Episcopal” with the

Unification of American Methodists in 1939. By the early 1970s,

the Methodists had merged with the Evangelical United Brethren

denomination, making STPMMC.


STMMP remained an active church through the 20th century.

In the late 1990s, major renovations to the church’s exterior and

Interior reaffirmed the congregation’s commitment to its historic

Presence in the city. But STPMMC could not control the unforeseen

Circumstances that resulted in a precipitous drop in its membership rolls.


Hazleton’s population decline and suburban flight directly impacted

the congregation’s size. As the children of lifelong congregants moved

Elsewhere, the church lost its viability. A corresponding drop in financial

resources followed, andSTPMMC had to reevaluate its future.


The church closed in 2004, nearly 170 years after its formation.

The landmark has since stood vacant, changing ownership, plagued

by instability caused by abandonment.


 STPMMC unfortunate outcome is not unique to post-industrial

Communities. In cities like Hazleton, the domes, spires and columns

of religious structures define the skyline and attest to the

diversity attracted by industry. Although a small city, Hazleton is

Endowed with diverse church architecture, signifying the many

European cultures that built sacred tributes to there

Ancient denominations.


Churches frequently close because they cannot afford the upkeep

of historic structures. Their leaders postpone necessary

maintenance and repairs, struggling to finance the congregation’s

future in a space with a leaking roof, crumbling masonry, or an

outdated mechanical system. STMMP deteriorating condition

is particularly painful, for the congregation maintained the building

until the very end. Just one decade ago, masons and roofers

busily kept pace with the church’s required upkeep. But years

of deterioration, exacerbated by break-ins and no utilities, has

turned STMMP into a blighted property.


In 2012, Hazleton Police Chief walk through the church and

called STMMP a “house of ill repute,” noting the ceiling’s peeling

plaster, beer cans scattered on the floor, and satanic pentagrams

scrawled on the walls. At the time, the building was a den for

vagrants, a nuisance property littered with alcohol containers and

drug paraphernalia.




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Google

undisclosed location

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Area 51 
 Is a highly classified remote Junk Yard. 
The Junk Yard current primary purpose is publicly unknown; however, based on historical evidence, it most likely supports the development and testing of experimental aircraft and weapons systems. The intense secrecy surrounding the Junk Yard has made it the frequent subject of conspiracy theories and a central component to unidentified flying object (UFO). Although the Junk Yard has never been declared a secret location, all research and occurrences in Area 51 are Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information.

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Google

Wrong ISO House

The Children's Factory Outlet

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Cinderella Lives In Pennsylvania March 28, 1988, by ROBERT H. ORENSTEIN

The Morning Call. Once upon a time, a factory in Pa made girls clothing under the Cinderella label. But this fairy tale nearly had a sad ending. Since the mid-1970s, the Cinderella had financial problems and eventually went bankrupt. In 1984, a Salt Lake City company bought the Cinderella label in bankruptcy court, but it pulled out of Pa in November 1986. Except for special efforts by the employees, the Pa factory would have closed. A half-dozen of them formed Kiddie Kloes Inc. and scraped up enough money for a down-payment to buy the machinery. The other 90 or so employees gave up their benefits and severed ties with the union to make it economically feasible for their new bosses to operate. Kiddie Kloes, whose name comes from the way the early-20th century Panther Valley immigrants spelled "clothes," couldn't afford to buy the building from the bank that held the mortgage. A group led by Bucks County businessman George M. Collie, which earlier purchased the rights to produce the Cinderella label, soon will buy the building. The final piece of the puzzle that cleared the way for Collie's group to buy the building fell into place last week. That's when the Carbon County commissioners accepted Collie's offer to pay half of the unpaid real estate taxes due on the building. Earlier, the Panther Valley School Board and Borough Council approved the plan. It's a scenario without any losers. The county, borough and school district will get half of the nearly $24,000 in delinquent real estate taxes, which is a cheap way to save the jobs and ensure that taxes be paid in the future. And the employees, many of whom have spent their entire adult lives working at the plant, will keep their jobs. Rita Chickilly, a 26-year veteran of the plant, summed up the employees' feelings. "We gave up lots. But we needed to. There's nothing else here."


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Google

And forgive us our trespasses

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This church is 114 years old. ASRC Church is located in northeast Philadelphia. It was designed by noted ecclesiastical architect Edwin Forrest Durang. There is a large Polish community who resides here and this dioceses services that population. The cemetery appears to not of had any recent interments. Most of the deceased seem to have been born in the late 19th century.

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Google

The Story of 100 Aisles

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OMOSCis part of a large Catholic complex located in West Philadelphia. This complex is situated on land that was part of a 43-acre farm that was purchased in 1849 for the establishment of a cemetery and a parish for the nascent Irish-Catholics of West Philadelphia. What began as Cathedral Cemetery and the new home of an Orphan Asylum grew over 170 years to include OMOSC, its convent and rectory buildings; several iterations of OMOS School. The current complex is comprised from north to south of: Cathedral Cemetery’s Gate House; OMOS Rectory/Parish House; OMOS Catholic Church; former Convent; and OMOS School. Cathedral Cemetery extends several blocks west from these buildings and includes a cemetery annex on the south side.


The church was designed and constructed between 1867 and 1873 by architect Edwin F. Durang, builder James Doyle, and mason John Canning at a cost of $80,000.A largely intact example of Durang’s work, the church employs Romanesque details including rounded arches, entrance-flanking towers, and abundant stained glass windows. It was designed, at least in part, to draw interest to Cathedral Cemetery. The church has undergone several significant alterations throughout the years, but retains much of its 19th-century fabric. The cornerstone was laid in November 1867 and by November 1869 the roof was in place.The first service was held in the basement of OMOS on June 12, 1870. Tower construction began shortly after and, by 1872, the Rosary Society supplied the original Stations of the Cross and a rented organ was installed. OMOS was dedicated on September 28, 1873.


By October 1875, the current organ was completed.The complex’s second building was the original rectory, located to the south of the Church and constructed in 1876. In 1885-86, architect John Jerome Deery designed OMOS School after the church’s basement proved too small for an expanding student body.The complex stepped closer to its present form between 1892 and 1895, when the present-day rectory, designed by architect Frank R. Watson, and Parish House, by Watson and Huckel, were constructed to the north and south of the church respectively.Durang returned in 1892 to design two spires, the northern one with a bell tower, on top of the façade’s existing towers.Durang, Deery, and Watson were by this time a well-established trio of architects with common ties to ecclesiastical commissions, specifically within the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. Additionally, Deery and Watson each worked under Durang as their careers developed, eventually seeing each architect establish their own practice during the late-nineteenth century.





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Google

House of Larceny

Checkmate

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The Chess House. 
Above is a postcard of some old cottages that sit on the site of an old TB Sanitarium located in upstate New York. The Sanitarium is now long gone and some of the cottages are now private residence.

Today one of those cottages stands vacant and was auctioned off in June of 2019.
above is a picture of how it sits today. This is a single family home that was built in 1898 and must have been own by an artist by the Ceramic Art left behind. As of now I can not find any other history on this location.

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Google

DrkCurrent.com is Live!

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Hello Abandoned New York Followers. To all that didn't know I started a new website Called        Dark Current Photography/DrkCurrent.com. Through that site I will be posting all aspects of photography as well as Urban Exploring (Urbex) Photos that are outside of New York State.            So I can focus on what AbandonedNY is supposed to be and that is abandonments located in NY.                                                                                                                                                                         Please go and check out the New Site! 



  Intro Video.


More video's to come as well. Keep an eye out..

Post No.2 On DrkCurrent.com ~That one Saturday I spent in Prison 2 years ago!

Post No. 3 on DrkCurrent.com ~ Westborough State Hospital

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Westborough State Hospital


Westborough State Hospital, originally “Westborough Insane Hospital”, was a historic hospital in Westborough, Massachusetts, which sat on more than 600 acres. The campus area was located between Lyman Street and Chauncy Lake. The hospital was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.
The hospital was established in 1884 on the grounds of the State Reform School for Boys. The existing buildings were renovated to accommodate the needs of a mental hospital and was opened on December 1, 1886. This was the first homeopathic hospital for the insane established in New England; but such hospitals existed in New York and Michigan.
The pioneering psychiatrist Solomon Carter Fuller spent the majority of his career practicing at the hospital in the early 1900s. While there, he performed his ground-breaking research on the physical changes to the brains of Alzheimer’s disease patients.
The hospital was closed in 2010, in anticipation of a new Worcester State Hospital opening in 2012. The ten-bed Deaf Unit, the two Adolescent Units, and the Intensive Residential Treatment programs were closed by June 2010.
On May 9, 2015, a memorial service was held in nearby Pine Grove Cemetery for the more than 500 patients who died at Westborough State Hospital and whose remains were unclaimed and subsequently buried in a potter’s field. The service was part of a larger effort to put names to the graves of the deceased. Despite being on the historic register, the entire hospital complex was demolished during the summer of 2019. A senior living complex is currently being built at the same location as the state hospital was.

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The Artist House 8/5/18

The House Behind the Trees.

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Located in the Catskills Mountains this old house can barley be seen from the road. I can not find any information on this this. I know its in the process of being restored. 

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The Lasso Motel (2018)

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The abandoned Lasso Motel in Catskills, New York. Its fading ghost sign beckons you back to another era. The motel is located on the former site of the Lasso House, a popular boarding house, which was constructed in 1876 by Myers. Myers was born in Middletown in 1848 and moved to the mountains around 1864 to work with his uncle in the harness maker’s trade. Around 1876 Myers gave up the harness trade to purchase a farm just south of the village on which he built his popular boarding house. In 1898 the Lasso House advertised itself as being “among Shawangunk Mountains, beautifully situated on a high elevation; near the village; accommodates 50 people; pure spring water, bath and sanitary closets.” In other advertisements, highlights included “well ventilated; raise our own vegetables; good fishing; cottage located on summit of hill, overlooking valley; beautiful surroundings; abundant shade; good livery connected with house; convenient to post and telegraph offices; plenty of milk and eggs.” In 1892, the cost to stay at the Lasso House was $7 to $10 per week, with the transient rate at $1.50 per day.
Around 1921 Myers sold the property, which was then resold many times over the years and eventually became home to the Lasso Motel. Although long abandoned, the 8-acre Lasso Motel property, along with two buildings with 43 motel rooms, was recently advertised for sale.













































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DRKCURRENT.COM NEW SITE LIVE!

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Hello Abandoned New York Followers. To all that didn't know I started a new website Called Dark Current Photography/DrkCurrent.com. Through that site I will be posting all aspects of photography as well as Urban Exploring (Urbex) Photos that are outside of New York State. So I can focus on what AbandonedNY is supposed to be and that is abandonments located in NY.                                                                              Please go and check out the New Site @ DRKCURRENT.COM !!!


 Intro Video.


More video's to come as well. Keep an eye out..

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The Abandoned Salesian School for Boys ~ By AntiquityEchoes.com

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 The Salesian School


Check out the New Post by my Friends at AntiquityEchoes.com 

This has been over a decade in the Making...

Goshen, New York, August 9th, 1964 - A child experiences his last moments of life shortly suspended in the air, before plummeting 36 feet to his death from the rooftop of the Salesian school for boys. Assumed initially to be a grievous accident, the investigation was reopened after the coroner's report noted that the youth's body was suspiciously far from the exterior wall of the building for someone who slipped and fell. Unfortunately, the physical evidence regarding the whereabouts of people at the school during the time of the tragic event was consumed by a fire in 1970. That, coupled with uncooperative staff and disputes over the time of death, resulted in no official conclusion on the events of that day. A wretched event shrouded in mystery and misinformation, a wound that would never properly heal. Though much speculation remains about that day, one fact is plain - Two parents outlived their young son in 1964.

The school continued operations after the incident, and while there is no causal link with the tragedy to be seen, enrollment steadily declined over the following years, with the shrinking student body resulting in the closing of the school in 1985. A youth center utilized the property for a few years thereafter but closed in 1991. After that the building sat empty, taking on a face more appropriate, perhaps, to its shadowy past.

It should come as little surprise that numerous accounts of ghosts and paranormal experiences became connected to the place, especially once it was shuttered. We put little stock in such things, but upon entering the rotting gymnasium there was certainly a presence there with us. This was no specter though, what greeted us was the chilled caress of a deep and forgotten history, an other-worldly embrace that makes one's hair stand on end and fills the mind with a mixture of wonder and dread. But this is only a superficial reaction, a recoiling against something strange and unknown. Once the feeling is accepted and the cause recognized, fear is replaced by sympathy. We became gripped by an implacable melancholy as we considered all this place had been and was no longer. The air hung heavy as we thought about whatever sad, eventual fate was in store for the school. The spirit of the place was indeed aggressive, but only in the way a frightened animal would be if cornered. Cowering with teeth bared, its low growl was directed not at us, the intruders, but at the more terrifying prospect of being forgotten by the world.

A fear that may come to pass, as the Salesian School was unceremoniously razed in the summer of 2022.

Check out the New Post by my Friends at AntiquityEchoes.com

See Salesian School from 2008 Here By Abandoned New York





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